Probably too late now, but I wouldnt bother even thinking about a secondary until your primary is finished. Secondly, there is no point in racking a brown ale to a secondary fermentor/carboy. You arn't fruiting, dry-hopping, oaking. And I doubt you need to clear a brown ale... Secondary fermentors are not quite as important as kit beer instructions make it seem.
An exception is if you need to free up your primary for another beer!
Sorry to Hi-jack, but I have to ask. Has anyone ever thought of contacting the kit companies and telling them their instructions need to be fixed? Or at the very least, just ask them why they have the instructions that they do?
I understand that their goal in the end is to make money and sell product. But wouldn't it be more beneficial to the company to give the person buying the kit the instructions to make a really good beer? OK, so you sold a kit and some basic equipment to person "X" But, the beer was **** because you told them it only took a week to ferment and you didn't mention anything about fermentation temperatures.
I would think most beer kit buyers aren't coming here for advice. They are just making the kit, trying to brew it, bottle it and then drink it in 3 weeks. Then when it tastes like pond scum, they've been turned off to homebrewing. Wouldn't it be better business to sell 10 kits to 20 people rather than 1 kit to 20 people?
I would have been duped on my first brew had it not been for this site (A brewers Best Amber Ale) I would have assumed that yeah, I should be drinking this in about 2 or 3 weeks and that an ambient room temp of 70 is perfectly fine for fermenting beer. Luckily I didn't receive the kit as a gift. I planned on starting homebrewing and gathered information from a bunch of sources and also found this place for advice.
Sorry, this hi-jack turned more into a rant than even a question, but it surprises me that no one has contacted them about this issue and even more so that the companies are still selling kits with such lackluster directions. What's the old proverb? Teach a person to make bad beer and they'll make one batch of beer, teach people to make good beer and they'll be able to make and drink good beer for life, right?